Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Tensions Continue Between Baghdad And Iraq's Kurdish North

For Iraq, Year Ends the Way It Began, With Guns Drawn -- New York Times

BAGHDAD — It was just the sort of episode that observers have long worried could provoke a serious conflict: when federal police agents sought to arrest a Kurdish man last month in the city of Tuz Khurmato in the Kurdish north of the country, a gunfight ensued with security men loyal to the Kurdish regional government.

When the bullets stopped flying, a civilian bystander was dead and at least eight others were wounded.

In response, the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, rushed troop reinforcements to the area, and Masoud Barzani, the president of Iraq’s semiautonomous northern Kurdish region, dispatched his own soldiers, known as the Peshmerga, and the forces remain there in a tense standoff.

Read more ....

More News On The Iraq - Kurd Conflict

Talabani Returns to Baghdad To Mediate Crisis With Erbil -- Al-Monitor
Baghdad-Kurdistan Talks Stall over Military Command -- Naharnet
Kurdish-Iraqi government talks collapse amid fear of civil war -- MinnPost/Christian Science Monitor
Barzani Not Intimidated By Maliki's Troop Deployments -- Al-Monitor
Barzani: Maliki’s Actions 'Illegal, Unconstitutional and Provocative’ -- Al-Monitor
Iraqi Kurds spell out oil ambitions -- UPI

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